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Spatiotemporal characteristics of motor actions by blind long jump athletes. | LitMetric

Spatiotemporal characteristics of motor actions by blind long jump athletes.

BMJ Open Sport Exerc Med

Rendiment, INEFC Performance, Barcelona, Spain.

Published: September 2017

AI Article Synopsis

  • Blind athletes rely on spatial and temporal cues to perform in sports, and this study focuses on analyzing the long jump dynamics specific to them compared to sighted athletes.
  • The research used high-speed cameras and radar to assess 12 male blind athletes' performances, finding they have shorter run-ups and different speed dynamics in their final strides than sighted athletes.
  • Results show that blind long jumpers have a longer contact time with the take-off board and do not adjust their leg actions for optimal jump distance like sighted athletes do.

Article Abstract

Background: Blind people depend on spatial and temporal representations to perform activities of daily living and compete in sport.

Objective: The aim of this study is to determine the spatiotemporal characteristics of long jumps performed by blind athletes and compare findings with those reported for sighted athletes.

Methods: We analysed a sample of 12 male athletes competing in the F11 Long Jump Finals at the Paralympic Games in London 2012. Performances were recorded using four high-speed cameras, and speeds were measured using a radar speed gun. The images were processed using validated image analysis software.

Results: The long jump run-up is shorter in blind athletes than in sighted athletes. We observed statistically significant differences for body centre of mass velocity and an increase in speed over the last three strides prior to take-off, contrasting with reports for sighted athletes and athletes with less severe visual impairment, who maintain or reduce their speed during the last stride. Stride length for the last three strides was the only spatial characteristic that was not significantly associated with effective jump distance. Blind long jumpers extend rather than shorten their last stride. Contact time with the take-off board is longer than that reported for sighted athletes.

Conclusion: The actions of blind long jumpers, unlike those without disabilities, do not vary their leg actions during the final runway approach for optimal placement on the take-off board.

Download full-text PDF

Source
http://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC5623324PMC
http://dx.doi.org/10.1136/bmjsem-2017-000252DOI Listing

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